Why are population growth rate estimates of past and present hunter–gatherers so different?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24696Date
2020-11-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Hunter–gatherer population growth rate estimates extracted from archaeological proxies and ethnographic data show remarkable differences, as
archaeological estimates are orders of magnitude smaller than ethnographic
and historical estimates. This could imply that prehistoric hunter–gatherers
were demographically different from recent hunter–gatherers. However,
we show that the resolution of archaeological human population proxies is
not sufficiently high to detect actual population dynamics and growth
rates that can be observed in the historical and ethnographic data. We
argue that archaeological and ethnographic population growth rates
measure different things; therefore, they are not directly comparable.
While ethnographic growth rate estimates of hunter–gatherer populations
are directly linked to underlying demographic parameters, archaeological
estimates track changes in the long-term mean population size, which
reflects changes in the environmental productivity that provide the ultimate
constraint for forager population growth. We further argue that because of
this constraining effect, hunter–gatherer populations cannot exhibit
long-term growth independently of increasing environmental productivity.
This article is part of the theme issue ‘Cross-disciplinary approaches to
prehistoric demography’.
Publisher
The Royal Society PublishingCitation
Tallavaara M, Jørgensen EK.2021 Why are population growth rateestimates of past and present hunter–gatherers so different?Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B376: 20190708Metadata
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